Film & Discussion: The Harvest

Event

When & Where

Humanist Hall

390 27th Street [between Telegarph & Broadway]

Oakland, CA

CA

April 17, 2013 - 7:30pm

Contact

Humanist Hall

Florence

HumanistHall@yahoo.com

510 681 8699

Every year there are more than 400,000 American children who are torn away from their friends, schools and homes to pick the food we all eat. Zulema, Perla and Victor labor as migrant farm workers, sacrificing their own childhoods to help their families survive. THE HARVEST/LA COSECHA profiles these three as they journey from the scorching heat of Texas’ onion fields to the winter snows of the Michigan apple orchards and back south to the humidity of Florida's tomato fields to follow the harvest.

From the Producers of the Academy-Award® Nominated film, WAR/DANCE and Executive Producer Eva Longoria, this award-winning documentary provides an intimate glimpse into the lives of these children who struggle to dream while working 12 – 14 hours a day, 7 days a week to feed America.

More than 400,000 children work in American fields to harvest the food we all eat

Children working in agriculture endure lives of extreme poverty

The average farmworker family makes less than $17,500 a year, well below the poverty level for a family of four.

Poverty among farmworkers is two times that of workers in other occupations

Farmworkers can be paid hourly, daily, by the piece or receive a salary, but they are always legally exempt from receiving overtime and often from receiving even minimum wage.

Families often cannot afford childcare and so have no choice but to bring their children out into the fields.

Increasing the incomes of migrant farmworkers by 40% would add just $15 to what the average US household spends every year on fruits and vegetables, according to a researcher at University of California Davis.

Children who work as farm laborers do not have access to proper education

Working hours outside of school are unlimited in agriculture.

On average, children in agriculture work 30 hours a week, often migrating from May – November, making it exceedingly difficult to succeed in school.

Almost 40% of farm workers migrate and their children suffer the instability of a nomadic lifestyle, potentially working in multiple states in a given season and attending multiple schools each with a different curriculum and standards.

Migrant children drop out of school at 4 times the national rate.

Children face health hazards and fatalities in the fields

According to the USDA, agriculture is the most hazardous occupation for child workers in the US

The risk of fatal injuries for children working in agriculture is 4 times that of other young workers.

Farmworkers labor in extreme temperatures and die from heat exposure at a rate 20 times that of other US workers and children are significantly more susceptible to heat stress than adults. Heat illness can lead to temporary illness, brain damage, and death.

Farmworkers are provided with substandard housing and sanitation facilities. As many as 15%-20% of farms lack toilets and drinking water for workers, even though they are required to provide them. Farms with 10 or fewer workers are not required to provide them at all.

EPA pesticide regulations are set using a 154-pound adult male as a model. They do not take children or pregnant women into consideration.

Research indicates that child farmworkers have a much higher rate of acute occupational pesticide-related illness than children in other industries and that there is a strong link between pesticide exposure and developmental disabilities. Long-term exposure in adults is associated with chronic health problems such as cancer, neurologic problems, and reproductive problems.

64% of farmworkers do not get healthcare because it is "too expensive"